NeelyAnn:
To this must be added the increased danger of dropping the Host on the ground and the increased ease of stealing the Body of the Lord for superstitious or horrible purposes.
Sorry, but I am going to say this is a red herring. There have been a few, proponents of receiving on the tongue, who have made a hue and cry about dropping the Host, and about someone absconding off with one.
Anyone who thinks that Hosts weren’t dropped prior to Vatican 2 was either not an altar boy, or simply not there. I was, and I have yet to see a Host dropped with Communion in the hand (others have related an incident or two they have seen). However, as an altar boy pre V2, we all carried a small cloth over our right arm, and father would use that to wipe the spit off his fingers that he received from someone who slaivated heavily. Other times, it would be used to cover the Host that had fallen to the floor (in spite of the paten, and probably due imn part to the haste with which he distributed Communion, and in part to people not opening their mouth wide enough, or catching it on their front teeth as they drew their tongue back in. while it was not a common occurance, it certainly happened several times a year while I was a server - from 6th grade through high school.
And anyone who wants badly enough to abscond with a Host can simply receive on the tongue and later extract it from their mouth, easier now to do that we have thicker Hosts.
NeelyAnn:
For those who believe with lively faith, this question ought to be enough to put an end to Communion in the hand: “What about the fragments?”
(Rethinking Communion in the Hand, by Jude A Huntz, HOMELITIC & PASTORAL REVIEW March 1997)
I agree that this reason alone, is enough to rethink Communion in the hand. But even if you wish not to, you should be able to understand why others are against this practice. There is certainly nothing wrong with someone being critical of this practice and wishing to avoid it.I certainly mean no disrespect, and I mean no lack of reverence (and someone is going to flame me for this for sure), but given the bread that Christ used, which is way more likely to cause crumbs, I wonder if we are getting into a hyper reverence mode at times? Christ managed to deal with it, and I do not suggest that it is a complete non-issue, but I am not convinced that a person being reverent is offending Christ if a crumb unknowingly goes astray.
It would seem that simple catechesis would do more for the issue than all the angst that seems to surround this.
NeelyAnn:
Also this, which is taken from an Interview of Cardinal Medina on March 9, 2001:
“Q. Does communion in the hand remain controversial?
A. I would not want some to create a large crisis over this. Personally, I prefer to give communion in the mouth. But if one wants it from me in the hand, I do not refuse it. In all cases, I do not think poorly of people preferring communion in the mouth. And I believe that the Holy Father prefers to give it in this way.”
For the entire interview, see:
omm.org/news/Interview-Cardinal-Medina-03-09-2001.html
That answer is what in a courtroom would be called non responsive to the question.
NeelyAnn:
It seems the issue here is not wether Communion in the hand is allowable, it certainly is, but wether it is the better thing to do. JKirk, may certainly be able to receive in this manner without it lessening his Faith, or diminishing his belief in the Eucharist. However, many others are not and it has lead to a weakening of their Faith and has diminished their belief in the Eucharist.
this statement, in general form, keeps making the rounds, and in its essence it is a “post hoc, ergo propter hoc” arguement. I have yet to see any poll, even one poorly structured, which gives this result, that people have lost reverence or had their faith weakend by reception in the hand. The statemetn, like all good urban legends, keeps making the rounds, and no one ever stops to cite a source.
I have asked people over a number of years, how they feel about Communion in the hand; to a person they have responded positively, and many have said that it has strengthened their faith. And I come from a parish with 24 hour perpetual Adoration, so it is not like I am speaking to a bunch of flaming liberals.
Much if not most of the weakening of faith has been do to catechesis that has been somewhere between poor and abysmal; and couple that with the general downslide of society over the last 40 years and it is a wonder anyone has faith. But to ascribe it to Communion in the hand? No.